On the 20th inst., at Cannes, after two days' illness, Annie Eaton, eldest daughter of the late Ratcliffe Woodward, of Glenorleigh, Dartmouth, to the everlasting grief of her son and daughters. [The Times]

Half-sister of George Ratcliffe Woodward, 1848-1934, priest, poet & musician; producer of Cowley Carol Book, Songs of Syon, etc, and many well-known Christmas carols.
The biography of George Ratcliffe Woodward, by John E Barnes, 1996, Canterbury Press, Norwich, includes some information about Annie, reproduced here with thanks (and a few minor corrections)
During these years Woodward was in regular correspondence with his half-sister Annie, and a dozen or so of her letters to him survive, the earliest of these, according to the postmark on the envelope, having been written in 1905. It seems that her second husband, the Revd. W. F. Eaton, was dead by this time [he was still alive but they were separated; he outlived her by 5 years], and that she lived in rooms or hotels, often accompanied by her son Claude. Most summers were spent in Germany, at Bad Nanheim, where she took the cure and refers to as 'my beloved Nanheim', although it seems that there were also regular visits to Italy. In England she favoured hotels in London and Eastbourne, although in a letter from Eastbourne written in 1909 she wrote 'we move into our nice old rooms next Saturday ... Hotels are impossible with their cheap food and vile cooking at ruinous prices'. Like his half-sister, Woodward was also living in hotels at this time, and it appears that he too may have made visits to the continent: writing from Bad Nanheim on one occasion Annie says 'could you not manage a few days here on your way to Bavaria or back? How you must long for the change after London, which seems to grow more and more terrible every year, with its heat & turmoil & restlessness'.
Like her half-brother, Annie was a staunch Conservative, and strongly anti-Liberal. Their common political outlook led her to remark in one letter 'Yes, dear George, I think you & I are the only true descendants of our good Father, & feel as he did'. King George V found immediate favour with her, and she wrote at the time of his accession: 'I hear all good of King George, he is a strong Conservative, very firm and determined, & it is believed he will not let these traitors play the fool. I hear he has already put Asquith in his place; that the police have intimated to L. George they cannot be responsible for his safety & that craven Mr. Churchill was hissed by his own yeomanry. May it all be true and much more to come!'
Like so many of their class and background in pre-First World War days, the half-brother and sister were were enthusiastic about Germany and German culture, an enthusiasm which Annie expressed with characteristic vigour in another of her letters: ' I just love the Germans, a fine race, they are very near the spiritual world. One can feel no wonder they produced a Goëthe, a Bach, & above all a Wagner. How proud they must be to belong to such a people. I feel so at home with all these dear people, they look at you with their Souls. We flee before the English, who are so dull, unfeeling, stupid, nothing but shallow talk! I always hope that if ever my Claude marries, it will be to a German or Austrian, they put all English silly young women to shame ...' Woodward can hardly have agreed with the preference of Wagner to Bach, despite his sharing of her liking for the former; on one occasion Annie thanked him for sending her 'that delicious book on Parsifal', perhaps Wagner's Parsifal written by Alfred Gurney.
But if Woodward and his half-sister were both like their father in espousing strong Tory views, it was only Annie who shared in his equally strong anti-Catholic opinions. With her own very individualistic religious approach, largely made up of some general ethical principles wedded to sentiment, she wrote in one of her letters: 'Until we have thrown away all rites and doctrines & sought and found God, Each person for themselves, then only does he live and soar into the heavenly Presences. Believe me, dear George, I am right & know by great Experience that I am right. Seek Him only & "He will guide us with His eye", not like horse & mule which have no understanding & must be held with bit & bridle by the Church, & terribly ignorant bad drivers, the clergy. I am only waiting until you can see as I do. It must come.' There is no evidence that it did, and his half-sister's dislike of his religious opinions seems to have had no more effect upon him than that of their father.